Andrew Mitchell: The noose tightens

Andrew Mitchell was hanging onto his job by a thread today, as senior figures from the press, politics and the police demanded his resignation.

This morning the Telegraph joined the Sun in demanding the Tory chief whip's resignation. The editorial came after a Conservative conference in Mitchell's home city of Birmingham in which MPs and ministers urged David Cameron to sack him this weekend, before parliament returns from recess.

"This has gone on long enough. Neither the prime minister nor the chief whip have proved capable of coming clean swiftly and putting this right. And it is now clear no one even in the Conservative party has confidence in Andrew Mitchell either," she said.

“The failure by David Cameron and Andrew Mitchell to take this incident seriously enough and to sort it out straight away means Andrew Mitchell will clearly not be able to instil respect in parliament or beyond as chief whip, and this will just drag on and on. David Cameron needs to put an end to this now and remove Andrew Mitchell from his position as chief whip."

A YouGov poll released today found 60% of people believe Mitchell's 'plebs' outburst outside Downing Street revealed his true feelings and 50% believe his attitudes reflect those of other Tory MPs.

Mitchell is meeting with the West Midlands Police Federation today to give his side of the story. While the West Midland's division is on good terms with him, the Federation as a whole is still demanding his resignation.

Mitchell's complicated rejection of the police account of what he said by the Downing Street gates has only worsened his reputation.

Asked whether he called the police "f***ing plebs", he insisted he did not use "the words attributed" to him, but would offer no further details.

Francis Maude is understood to be lined up to take over from Mitchell as chief whip. He is currently Cabinet Office minister and conducting an efficiency saving sweep in Whitehall, but he served as junior whip in Margaret Thatcher's government.

Mitchell could also find himself in trouble for a decision to reverse an aid cut to Rwanda on his last day as international development secretary. A Commons committee is deciding on whether it will launch an investigation into the decision.